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Docker Cloud CMS offers the option to run development and production installations of its software on-premise or within a virtual private cloud. This option is available to subscription customers and can be utilized in both a development and production capacity. The actual installation and management of the various services involved in a full-scale production-ready Cloud CMS deployment is facilitated greatly through the use of Docker. Docker provides a way for all of the various tiers to be enca

API Server The Cloud CMS API Server is a Java application that launches inside of a Java Servlet Container. The Java application surfaces a REST API as well as backend services and DAOs to support connectivity to Mongo DB, Elastic Search and a slew of Amazon services including S3, SNS, SQS, Route 53, Cloud Front and more. Properties File Cloud CMS is primarily configured via a properties file that is auto-detected and loaded when the underlying Spring Framework starts up. This properties file is

Docker Installation The Cloud CMS Application Server is additionally provided as a Docker image. With Docker, you can launch this image within its own container running on Linux, Mac OS or Windows. The container can be managed, brought online and shutdown at any time. Docker To get started, you will need to familiarize yourself with Docker. Install Docker onto your operating system and become familiar with the command line tools. Git You will also need to be familiar with Git. The source for the

Getting Started Welcome to the Cloud CMS Documentation center. Cloud CMS is an API-first content management system that provides everything you need on the back end to power web sites and mobile applications. Cloud CMS makes it easy for your business users to create, manage and publish amazing content to your users! You are reading the Getting Started guide. To learn more about Cloud CMS and what it does, select from the links provided below or use the tree on the left-hand side. We offer severa

Cloud CMS is available as a set of Docker images so that you can run it on your own. This includes running it on-premise within your own data center as well as running it on Amazon AWS, Rackspace, IBM Bluemix or a variety of other Docker Container hosting platforms. Cloud CMS distributes its Docker images via Docker Hub. These are private images that are not generally available. Rather, Cloud CMS subscribers are granted permission to pull down the images once they've signed up for a Cloud CMS Do

Upgrades This document provides technical guidance for upgrades. Upgrade to Cloud CMS Version 3.2 The Elastic Search version in this release has been updated from 1.7.1 to 6.2.4. Steps to follow to set up Docker 3.2: Download the Docker release 3.2 here. Download the Zip or Tar file of Elastic Search 6.2.4 here and then Unzip the package. Unzip the Docker release package, Create a new folder and paste the kit you use from the package. You can also replace your existing kit with the new release's

Our definitions are based on JSON schema and, as such, the default is to use strings for dates. The date controls in our forms engine let you customize the format string so that you can store ISO 8601 or other formats (perhaps simplified formats) as per your preference. The advantage here is simplicity with these controls and compatibility with JSON schema. The disadvantage is that MongoDB provides a lot of very powerful capabilities for range query and sorting that do not play as nicely with th

Kits Cloud CMS ships a number of pre-built kits containing Docker configuration files to help you get start. These kits are built from customer feedback to provide the most commonly requested scenarios. They can be used straight away or at the very least can serve as a useful reference. To download the Cloud CMS Docker Kits, please visit our Docker download page. Kits All of the Docker kits utilize Docker and Docker Compose. In each kit, you'll find a docker-compose.yml file which describes the

OEM The OEM kit provides a way for developers, integrators, partners and those who are embedded Cloud CMS in custom solutions to build and test extensions. These extensions include UI extensions as well as API extensions in the form of Java / Spring beans. The kit consists of the following services: ui api mongodb elasticsearch These are connected like this: Running Use the following commands: docker-compose build --force-rm
docker-compose up And then open a browser to: http://localhost To acces

UI Extensions The Docker-based Cloud CMS UI provides additional extension patterns beyond the AMD-driven mechanism for user interface components and screens. Since Docker allows you to run on-premise, you can use these extension patterns to influence more foundational changes to the way the application works. Environment Variables When the Cloud CMS user interface starts up, it looks to environment variables to tell it whether there are any extensions available to be loaded. Extensions are store

This is a big subject and, as you know, there are many ways to set things up to be robust. That said, some practices are better than others. I can relate at least what we do and what we've seen customers do. First, I'd recommend thinking of Cloud CMS as black box application that runs on top of MongoDB, Elastic Search (both of which can be thought of as databases) and a binary storage provider. Cloud CMS is a stateless application whose setup is actually quite simple. It doesn't maintain any sta

Billing Provider Configuration Type billingProviderConfiguration Datastore Type application Supports authorities, permissions, transfer If this sounds familiar, it's because it's exactly what Cloud CMS uses to supports its own subscription plans for Cloud CMS customers. Just as we bill our customers for metered usage of the platform, you are free to pass those costs downstream to your own clients. And you can use the very same technical capabilities and facilities to do so. Cloud CMS offers bill

How does multi-tenancy work? ie I want to have multiple companies with sub-groups of users in each company - to follow, how would we customize the interface for each company? There are two good ways to achieve multi-tenancy with Cloud CMS. - One is to use multiple "projects" - i.e. one per customer. Each project has it's own domain of users and groups, as well as it's own content definitions, instances and ACLs. As such, you can use each project to store the content on a per-client basis. You ca

What is the recommended Xmx value for running the API service? The 2GB setting on the On-Premise "quickstart" distribution is a default for development usage. In production, we recommend putting as much memory as you can. Essentially, the API should use as much memory as is allocated to the API docker container. We usually ask customers to consider an M class large instance type (something on the order of 7.5GB of RAM per API). The UI can use considerably less. For the UI, a 2GB allocation is fi

Not sure which CMS is a better fit? Review these points to help guide your selection. Criteria Cloud CMS Contentful Ease of Use Implements a role-based UI to accommodate various functions. Simple user interface for defining content types and instances. Update Strategy Documents are published individually, or as part of larger change sets. Documents are published one-by-one. Workflow Process Flexible workflow capability. Allows teams and roles to be created along with a workflow designer for defi

Cloud CMS offers a few different ways for you to store files - including storing them in S3 (recommended) or even on a local partition (such as an NFS mount). In our SaaS offering, everything is stored in S3 automatically and when you install on-premise, you can configure this to your preference. See this documentation page under Binary Storage: https://www.cloudcms.com/documentation/docker/configuration/api-server.html We definitely can handle large binary files in the 10's or 100's of megabyte

Not sure which CMS is a better fit? Review these points to help guide your selection. Criteria Cloud CMS Prismic.io Ease of Use Implements a role-based UI to accommodate various functions. Complex user interface for defining content types and instances. Item creation must occur here. See API Access. Update Strategy Documents are published individually, or as part of larger change sets. Documents are published individually, or as part of larger change sets. Workflow Process Flexible workflow capa

There are a few places where this either occurs automatically if you're using our hosted service or can occur optionally if you're either running within Docker containers on your own or integrating to custom CDN endpoints. First, the API itself can be fronted by a CDN that supports fallback lookup to an origin server. In this case, we recommend Amazon CloudFront with short-lived TTLs on cache headers. More specifically, you can use Amazon's API Gateway to get caching coverage across multiple geo

Multifactor Authentication Cloud CMS supports Multifactor Authentication (MFA) to provide enhanced security for your users and their account credentials. With Multifactor Authentication is enabled for a user, that user will be required to supply a verification code in addition to their username and password. The verification code is delivered to the user's phone or mobile device via SMS, a phone call or an app. The code may also be delivered via a hardware device depending on the kind of provide

Type Pages The type-pages key lets you define routes that serve as landing pages for entity types. Specific pages within Cloud CMS serve as landing pages for an entity that is being viewed. Type Page configurations allow you to specify which URI should be dispatched to when viewing. Each type page has a very simple binding like this: {
"uri": "{uri}"
} Example - Dispatching a Workflow Task to the Overview Page {
"evaluator": "entity-is-type",
"condition": "Gitana.WorkflowTask",
"

Your Task Dashboards Tasks assigned to you in a Workflow process can be seen in your Platform Dashboard, Project Dashboard, or an email may have been sent to you with the Task link Platform Dashboard - Tasks asigned to you for all Projects will be listed Project Dashboard - Tasks asigned to you for the Project only will be listed Task Overview If you click on a task, or open the Task link in the email, the Task Overview page is opened - From here you can perform the following actions on the task